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Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Badd

Title: Badd

Author: Tim Tharp

Publisher: Knopf Books for Young Readers

Publication Date: January, 2011

Genre/Format: Contemporary Historical Fiction/Novel

Summary: Ceejay never cared if she fit in anywhere because she was the younger sister of Bobby- a charming, bad boy who was her hero. She always knew she fit there. But then when Bobby returns home from fighting in Iraq, he is different. The connection between them is gone and Ceejay feels lost. The old Bobby has to be somewhere inside of this new Bobby and she is going to get him back to normal.

What I Think: This book is an interesting one as it deals with a bunch of topics that are not normally found in young adult literature. First, I loved that this book was set in a rural setting filled with blue collar families. I feel that it is a population that is not often represented in stories. This book is also a female coming of age story. Often coming of age stories have male protagonists, so it is nice to see one where the female main character grows up and finds her voice. When you begin the novel, Ceejay sounds so young and more selfish than her 16 years. By the end, Ceejay has become her own woman. Her emotional journey through hope, loss, death, acceptance, valiance all lead to a much stronger of a character.

Another interesting aspect of the book is the portrayal of post-traumatic stress disorder. Many times war stories are told before and during the war and then the affects are forgotten, but every soldier that returns brings some of that war back with them and it affects others more. Bobby represents many a young soldier out there that went to fight in a war way too young and saw things no one should have to see and did things that no one should have to do. It really puts everything into perspective.

"Did you ever watch ants when you were little? I'm sure you did. I'm sure you sympathized with them like I did. They're so small that a hard wind can pick them up and blow them a million ant-miles away from home, but still they just buckle down to business and make the trek back through mighty forests of grass blades with all sorts of trouble lurking to take them down. And you'll see them with these huge, boulder like crumbs on their backs, hauling them back to the hill, where all of them are working together, making this pyramid, this colossal wonder of the world, to keep them safe from sand lions and grass hoppers and toads. They're amazing." (p. 11)

"Brianna says I'm being ridiculous- you can't fall in love at six years old- but I swear the first time I saw Tillman in Mrs. Gray's first-grade class, my stomach did a backflip. It didn't matter how big his Adam's apple was or that he was a little big dense- he was dark and brown-eyed and hard-muscled as a Doberman pinscher. No one in our grade could take him in a fight. And tough as he was, something about his eyes made you want to take care of him, made you want to lean your head against his, stroke his hair, and say, "Everything's going to be all right, Tillman Grant."" (p. 27-28)